Stocks Up, Oil Down: Market Movement Expected After Bin Laden’s Death

• With the market opening fewer than 12 hours after President Obama’s speech on Osama Bin Laden, stocks are expected to open higher, and crude oil prices are already down 2 percent. [CNN Money]

• Bin Laden, who was shot in the head by American military and CIA operatives, was buried at sea afterward, U.S. government sources reported. [The New York Times]

• The Princeton University Spanish professor who committed suicide last month after an unexplained conflict with the university was suspended from teaching four days before his death, the New York Times reports. A letter to Dr. Antonio Calvo from the administration cited him for “engaging in extremely troubling and inappropriate behavior in the workplace,” though the letter did not specify those behaviors. [The New York Times]

• Ending a thoroughly modern wedding ceremony, the British monarchy used its Flickr stream to release day-after wedding portraits and photographs. [British Monarchy on Flickr]

• And at the box office, a huge opening weekend for the latest installment in the Fast and Furious franchise: Fast Five, starring Vin Diesel and the Rock, took more than an estimated $83.6 million; Rio was next with an estimated $14.4 million; and last was Tyler Perry’s new Madea movie, with an estimated $10.05 million. [Variety]